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    ANA's First EOD course underway in the north

    ANA's First EOD course underway in the north

    Courtesy Photo | Kris A. Anderson, a counter improvised explosive devise advisor with Ronco Consulting...... read more read more

    AFGHANISTAN

    12.07.2007

    Courtesy Story

    NATO Training Mission Afghanistan

    By Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian P. Seymour
    CSTC-A Public Affairs

    MAZAR-e-SHARIF, Afghanistan – Nearly 40 of Afghanistan's finest soldiers and policemen have completed the first of five important phases of training to becoming one of their country's elite.

    In the first months they have learned basic demining procedures, unexploded ordnance recognition, basic first-aid and minefield casualty evacuation. In 18 more weeks these members of the Afghan National Army and Afghan National Police will become explosive ordnance disposal technicians.

    Afghanistan is one of the world's most heavily mined countries. Efforts to remove them have been ongoing for two decades, but it could take decades more to remove the millions of mines still believed to be buried throughout the country. This is one reason the ANA and ANP are involved.

    The Explosive Ordnance Disposal School, which is the ANA's first branch training outside Kabul, is located at Camp Shaheen. The school consists of two classrooms – with plans to build four more – and a training field for mine-clearing.

    Just outside the wire is a 72 square-kilometer demolition range where more than 20 Afghan and international instructors from RONCO Consulting Corporation, based out of Washington D.C., plan to spend much of the next four training phases with the students.

    Chief Instructor Dave Bruce and his team of 14 instructors from the RONCO Company patterned this course after a successful program they used in Az Zubair, Iraq, in 2004. For three years they trained Iraqis on a curriculum based on particular threats to their country.

    "We have been successful with our training in Iraq," said Bruce. "And we are confident that Afghanistan will be no different."

    The training team had already arrived at the site here in late October before putting the final touches on the course curriculum. Slight modifications were necessary to suit specific threats in Afghanistan. On Nov. 10, they welcomed the first Afghan soldiers and policemen to the school and started training the first Afghan students to become EOD technicians.

    The training can't come too soon. One survey found almost one Afghan in seven is affected by mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO). In 2005, the International Committee of the Red Cross recorded 898 mine/UXO casualties. The victims were usually working or playing near ordnance in unmarked areas. There are estimated to be between 50 and 100 thousand landmine survivors in Afghanistan.

    One of the students, ANP Sgt. Mohammed Sedig, formerly a member of the Afghan National Civil Order Police in Kabul, knows these dangers firsthand.

    "I must study for a test now, but I am excited to know that I will be made into an EOD policeman," Sedig said. "Since my friends were killed playing with ordnance last year, I decided it was good for me to learn about IEDs and other things like that so that I know how to be safe."

    This 22-week course is designed to be both challenging and rewarding work for the students, while making them operate more safely around unexploded ordnance, according to Bruce.

    "It gives them the opportunity as soldiers and policemen to make a difference in the country by cleaning up the remnants of war and making it safer for everyone," he said.

    Originally, Afghan and coalition leaders discussed the possibility of having three mobile teams set up around the country to train the prospective EOD element but decided to locate the course in one place.

    "Having just one training facility is better for our overall objective," Bruce said. "If we were to have three teams roving around the country, it would be more difficult to coordinate the training."

    Now that their training has begun, the road is clear for these future explosive ordnance technicians.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.07.2007
    Date Posted: 12.07.2007 16:45
    Story ID: 14535
    Location: AF

    Web Views: 143
    Downloads: 127

    PUBLIC DOMAIN